Title 2 › Chapter 19— CONGRESSIONAL AWARD PROGRAM › Subchapter I— CONGRESSIONAL AWARD PROGRAM › § 803
Creates a 25-member Board and explains who picks members and how it runs. Twenty-four members come in four groups of six picked by congressional leaders: six by the Senate majority leader (including one Congressional Award recipient), six by the Senate minority leader (including one local program volunteer), six by the Speaker of the House (including one local program volunteer), and six by the House minority leader (including one Congressional Award recipient). One person added is the Board Director, who cannot vote. Each of the four six-member groups must include at least one member of Congress. Appointments can follow outside recommendations, and members should care about the Award Program’s work. If party control changes, each member stays recorded as appointed by whoever first picked them. Appointed members serve at the pleasure of the person who picked them and normally have 4-year terms that start on October 1 of even-numbered years, with half the seats beginning every even year (rule applies to appointments on or after July 7, 2010). Members may be reappointed but generally not more than two full consecutive terms, with special rules if they fill a vacancy or serve as Chairman. Vacancies are filled the same way as the original appointment, and a member may stay on until a successor is in place. Meetings need proper notice and at least 11 members to begin; a majority of those present then acts as the quorum. Members do not get pay but may get travel expenses. The Board must meet at least twice a year, including one meeting in Washington, D.C.; the Chairman calls meetings and must call one if one‑third of members ask in writing. The Board elects a Chairman and Vice Chairman from its members, may create committees (federal employees may serve on them without pay), and must write bylaws to prevent conflicts of interest and set financial controls. A member who misses four straight properly noticed meetings (or fails to send an approved designee) is automatically removed; the Chairman must warn a member after three absences and notify Congress when such a removal creates a vacancy. A copy of the bylaws had to be sent to each House within 90 days after November 25, 1985, and must be sent within 10 days after any change.
Full Legal Text
The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
2 U.S.C. § 803
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60